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Happiness sells best when it sounds easy: stay comfortable, avoid conflict, keep your private life hidden, and everything will work out. Then Jesus opens the Sermon on the Mount and says something that feels almost upside down. He calls the blessed life “true, abiding happiness” and attaches it to peacemakers, the humble, the pure, and even those who are hunted and harassed for doing what is right. That’s where we start, clearing away the confusion about what God means by happiness and why the path often begins with dying to self.
We dig into “Blessed are the peacemakers” and why Jesus doesn’t praise the undisturbed. Biblical peacemaking is active, costly, and honest. It carries the weight of shalom, a whole life, and it refuses the shortcuts of glossing over sin or sacrificing truth. We connect that to the cross and to everyday Christian witness: when we share the gospel, we step into the role of ambassador and deliver the news that peace with God is available through Jesus Christ. That kind of peacemaking can ruffle feathers, cost relationships, and sometimes invite real opposition.
From a wartime story about messengers announcing peace, to the quiet power of Robert Chapman’s kindness toward a hostile critic, we explore what persecution for righteousness’ sake actually is, and what it is not. We also rehearse the Beatitudes as a direct challenge to the world’s “me first” happiness script, ending with a sobering reflection on success and emptiness through Muhammad Ali’s words: “I had the world, and it was nothing.” If you want a deeper, steadier joy that holds up when life gets hard, press play, then subscribe, share with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find the show.
Explore all of our Biblically Faithful Resources at https://www.wisdomonline.org
Learn more: https://www.wisdomonline.org/
Support the show
By Stephen Davey4.8
245245 ratings
Share a comment
Happiness sells best when it sounds easy: stay comfortable, avoid conflict, keep your private life hidden, and everything will work out. Then Jesus opens the Sermon on the Mount and says something that feels almost upside down. He calls the blessed life “true, abiding happiness” and attaches it to peacemakers, the humble, the pure, and even those who are hunted and harassed for doing what is right. That’s where we start, clearing away the confusion about what God means by happiness and why the path often begins with dying to self.
We dig into “Blessed are the peacemakers” and why Jesus doesn’t praise the undisturbed. Biblical peacemaking is active, costly, and honest. It carries the weight of shalom, a whole life, and it refuses the shortcuts of glossing over sin or sacrificing truth. We connect that to the cross and to everyday Christian witness: when we share the gospel, we step into the role of ambassador and deliver the news that peace with God is available through Jesus Christ. That kind of peacemaking can ruffle feathers, cost relationships, and sometimes invite real opposition.
From a wartime story about messengers announcing peace, to the quiet power of Robert Chapman’s kindness toward a hostile critic, we explore what persecution for righteousness’ sake actually is, and what it is not. We also rehearse the Beatitudes as a direct challenge to the world’s “me first” happiness script, ending with a sobering reflection on success and emptiness through Muhammad Ali’s words: “I had the world, and it was nothing.” If you want a deeper, steadier joy that holds up when life gets hard, press play, then subscribe, share with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find the show.
Explore all of our Biblically Faithful Resources at https://www.wisdomonline.org
Learn more: https://www.wisdomonline.org/
Support the show

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